If they can’t easily hit the ball carrier then they can’t easily get the ball off him. The reason you are using a cage is to protect your ball carrier, you can probably see by looking at the diagram that there is no way for the opposing team to just run up and hit the player with the ball. I covered what a cage looks like above, so you now know what a cage actually is, but now I’ll explain why they are so commonly used and effective. Those subjects I’ll cover separately as they will start getting into more advanced situations. If I covered advancing a cage, preventing a cage, stalling a cage and how to deal with everything that flows from those subjects this would get rather long. Cages are quite a complex part of Blood Bowl and I’m just going to deal with the basic cage in this article. As you can see a basic cage looks very much like the “5” on a standard six sided die, the ball carrier sat in the middle and four team mates one at each diagonal corner from him. The Dwarfs have formed a basic cage around their ball carrier and the Elves are in place to defend against it advancing. The diagram shows a match between an Elf side on defence (in yellow) against a Dwarf team on offence (in blue).
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